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Book Cover
E-book
Author Llavador, Humberto, author

Title Sustainability for a warming planet / Humberto Llavador, John E. Roemer, Joaquim Silvestre
Published Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2015
©2015

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 320 pages) : illustrations
Series EBL-Schweitzer
Contents Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. Sustainability and Discounted Utilitarianism -- 2. An Introductory Model with Education and Skilled Labor -- 3. Sustainability for a Warming World -- 4. The "Climate-Change Economics" Literature: Nordhaus and Stern -- 5. Sustainability in a Warming, Two- Region World -- 6. Modeling Catastrophes: Two Extensions -- Conclusion -- Appendix A: Calibration -- Appendix B: Mathematica Code -- References -- Index
Summary The authors provide a normative approach to global warming that they call sustainability. It consists in finding an economic path that, while satisfying environmental and other constraints, would maintain human welfare for all future generations. They also explain why the current discounted utilitarian approach is unsatisfactory. The book has many original arguments expressed in a clear, logical structure. It should be required reading for graduate students in public economics
"Human-generated greenhouse gas emissions imperil a global resource: a biosphere capable of supporting life as we know it. What is the fair way to share this scarce resource across present and future generations, and across regions of the world? This study offers a new perspective based on the guiding ethics of sustainability and egalitarianism. Sustainability is understood as a pattern of economic activity over time that sustains a given rate of growth of human welfare indefinitely. To achieve this, the atmospheric concentration of carbon must be capped at some level not much higher than exists today, and investments in education and research should be higher than they currently are. International cooperation between developing and developed nations is also vital, because economic growth and the climate problem are intertwined. The authors propose that the guiding principle of bargaining should be that the dates at which developing countries' living standards catch up with those of developed countries should not be altered by the agreement. They conclude that developed economies would have to agree not to exceed 1 percent growth in per capita GDP annually, while developing nations should grow at a faster rate, but still lower than current projections, until they converge. The authors acknowledge that achieving such a dramatic slowdown would carry political and economic challenges."-- Publisher's description
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Climate change mitigation.
Greenhouse gas mitigation.
Carbon sequestration
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Infrastructure.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Environmental Economics.
Carbon sequestration
Climate change mitigation
Greenhouse gas mitigation
Form Electronic book
Author Roemer, John E., author.
Silvestre, Joaquim, author.
LC no. 2014041195
ISBN 9780674286597
0674286596